Physiological Laboratory, Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, University of Cambridge, Downing Site, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Biophys J. 2023 Feb 7;122(3):484-495. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2022.12.038. Epub 2022 Dec 31.
The vital function of red blood cells (RBCs) is to mediate the transport of oxygen from lungs to tissues and of CO from tissues to lungs. The gas exchanges occur during capillary transits within fractions of a second. Each oxygenation-deoxygenation and deoxygenation-reoxygenation transition on hemoglobin triggers sharp changes in RBC pH, leading to downstream changes in ion fluxes, membrane potential, and cell volume. The dynamics of these changes during the variable periods between capillary transits in vivo remains a mystery inaccessible to study by current methodologies, a knowledge gap on a fundamental physiological process that is the focus of the present study. The use of a computational model of human RBC homeostasis of tested accreditation enabled a detailed investigation of the expected RBC changes during intercapillary transits, with results advancing novel insights and predictions. The predicted rates of relative RBC volume change on oxygenation-deoxygenation (oxy-deoxy) and deoxygenation-reoxygenation transitions were about 1.5%/min and -0.9%/min, respectively, far too slow to allow the cells to reach steady states in the intervals between capillary transits. The amplitude of the oxy-deoxy-reoxygenation volume fluctuations varied in proportion with the duration of the intercapillary transit intervals. Upon capillary entry, oxy-deoxy-induced changes occur concurrently with deformation-induced PIEZO1 channel activation, both processes affecting cell pH, membrane potential, and cell volume during intertransit periods. The model showed that the effects were strictly additive as expected from processes operating independently on the cell's homeostatic fabric. Analysis of the mechanisms behind these predictions revealed, for the first time, the complex interactions between oxy-deoxy and ion transport processes that ensure the long-term homeostatic stability of RBCs for optimal gas transport in physiological conditions and how these may become altered in diseased states. Possible designs of microfluidic devices to test the model predictions are discussed.
红细胞(RBCs)的重要功能是介导氧气从肺部到组织以及二氧化碳从组织到肺部的运输。气体交换发生在毛细血管转运的几分之一秒内。血红蛋白的每次氧合-去氧和去氧-再氧合转换都会导致 RBC pH 值的急剧变化,从而导致离子通量、膜电位和细胞体积的下游变化。在体内毛细血管转运之间的可变时间段内,这些变化的动态仍然是当前方法无法研究的奥秘,这是一个基本生理过程的知识空白,也是本研究的重点。经过测试认证的人类 RBC 动态平衡计算模型的使用使得可以在毛细血管转运之间详细研究 RBC 的预期变化,研究结果提供了新的见解和预测。氧合-去氧(oxy-deoxy)和去氧-再氧合转变期间相对 RBC 体积变化的预测速率分别约为 1.5%/min 和-0.9%/min,太慢而无法使细胞在毛细血管转运之间的间隔内达到稳定状态。oxy-deoxy-reoxygenation 体积波动的幅度与毛细血管转运间隔的持续时间成比例变化。进入毛细血管时,oxy-deoxy 诱导的变化与变形诱导的 PIEZO1 通道激活同时发生,这两个过程都会在转运间隔期间影响细胞 pH 值、膜电位和细胞体积。模型表明,由于这些过程独立于细胞的动态平衡结构而独立运行,因此效果是严格相加的。对这些预测背后的机制的分析首次揭示了 oxy-deoxy 和离子转运过程之间的复杂相互作用,这些相互作用确保了 RBC 的长期动态平衡稳定性,从而在生理条件下实现最佳气体运输,以及在疾病状态下这些如何发生改变。还讨论了测试模型预测的微流控设备的可能设计。